The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 24, 1919, Page 10

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PAGE 10 FOURTH can UNION Harry Carey in a Bret Harte Story! How’s That for a Saturday Show to Go To? | Friday—Final Showings of George Walsh in “The Winning Stroke” RUSSELL ON THE WURLITZER POSITIVELY THE SAME PRODUCTION THAT WAS SHOWN AT THE METROPOLI- TAN THEATRE AT ADVANCED PRICES, HAROLD BELL WRIGHT'S FAMOUS RURAL STORY OF .THE OZARKS First time in pictures THE SHEPHERD OF.. THE HILLS: 10 REELS Po This Show: Adults ... Be Children . Loge Seats ‘ Including War Tax 50 jfollowed Sunday by another hilarious |tlon of the aucoess, It concer FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1919. FRIDAY Last Showings of Dorothy Dalton —IN— “THE MARKET oF SOULS” Friday —7 and 9. FASHION SHOW en ee! ee RGR PE RE ERA ONE Se te ee A tremendous sea spectacle, founded on the world-famous “Romany Rye,” and showing the wreck of a giant liner dur. ing a terrific storm— Bate oR * *% * % o wie LIBERTY ——e ae Few photoplays have so well illustrated the perfection of present-day motion eee eee on mZORATS Fmocmas sleet “The Life Line’ combines a melodramtic love theme with artistic pro- pte end Dalton in - luction. . a soe ee RL The Sort of Story for Which Motion Pictures Were Invented Y few young misses of 18 have enjoyed the meteoric ascent i public favor that has been the lot of Miss Josephine Hill. She started in vaudeville not #0 very long ago, as Lime in reckoned, and appeared with her own production. Later she spent a year in company with Gus Edwards, famous song writer and vaudevillian | Then the lure of the mercury took her to Universal City, where she became a comedy queen with Eddie I announcement that she has been se one and Lee Moran. Now comes the ed to be costar with “Hoot” Gibson, Universal's cowboy actor, in a series of westerns, One picture has been completed and her is now in preparation, lace Reid is starring at the Liberty. remains until Saturday night, to be The wonderful, death-defying exploits of the life-savers during the storm at sea are real, vivid, thrilling. ye SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, 31 artists under Reginald Dunn. Advance | STRAND — Jack Piekford in im | comedy, “Why Smith Left Home." Bryant Washburn plays the lead In this new p! re, which is an adap | | rgo Broadhurst stage the tures rothy Phillips in ry Man”; Up in Alf's Ree dv . who elopes of a young man. with a pretty 1 nd has all sorts of Wrens”; Happy Hooligan Ani- queer difficulties on his honeymoon. —— es “After the Bail”; | | - — ——— — — ; = The cast includes Lois Wilson COLONIAL-——Monree Salisbury in | | STRAND Jin order to collect a legacy for a/%- eo pis ne ee eee eee eee MInMON = Gosene ne Another Broadway stage success | girl chum whose husband is reported | | Rex Beach Film a a gree ann ¢ Mri) | “Winsiag stroke"; Marry Pollara | [bas been transferred to the screen. | missing in France and who is herself ark Ward } comedy; News Bvents. “Widow by Proxy,” which was ex:|too proud to secure the money due || CLASS A—Anita Mewart in “From | a AA eee eon ith Mew York the |her from his exeoal retire’ || At the Clemmer ny | | | | LITTLE—"The Romance of Seattle,” | |atregoers, is the latest starring ve-| “In Wrong,” starring Jack Pick- | 5¢ {| loral movies; Hill Farnum in “The | /hicle for dainty little Maruerite ford, closes tonight. Piunderer m * Clark, and will be shown at the First } Ce tH) Strand beginning Saturday } , J . REX Originally a play by Catherine | Youns’s ‘ ah cers ye flim version in|! San Francisco and vicinity while | Harold Bell Wright, author and| Chisholm Cushing, the film version mstruction on interiors was under producer The rd of the|sald to furnish Miss Clark with o7 way at the Los Angeles studios, comes to the of the mont charming light comedies | tne o tad » Saturday, refers to his pro-|in which she has yet appeared. She! youise Lovely will appear opposite | duction not as a motion picture in| has the role of a wideawake young | Cartisie Blackwell in “The Beloved! the same sense that others are, but| bachelor girl appearing as a Wider ich as @ story told by the camera Eiitcib5se, PARR TONIGHT’S THE LAST NIGHT Strencth ené The dis Herve Force in Two Weeks’ Wright be 7 Instances tion i» made by Mr ause of the fact that he transplanted his famous book to the screen page by page, re-| ze more and more that the fusing absolutely to allow a protes-| strength and nerve sional scenario writer to prepare tly evidenced by , soript are the direct B Nure to suc-| So determined was the author to has merel Home of 100 Per Cent Pictures excensive use not on) f the a . eeed” In life a le for the transfer his writing to the en You've been hearing from the handicap in one's social anpiras °xACUY as it was written, and so op|f all your friends about tions Compare the thin, sickly, posed to this idea were tho staff this hot comedy story— of directors he employed at first, ss that he discharged the entire aggre (fp S¢e, it for teach To- gation, and acted as director, loca night or Saturday— tion man and technical supervisor in fact he did everything himself W ll R id STARTING SATURDAY 4 DAYS— Sessue | Hayakawa Of That Snappy Farce-Comedy “OH, BOY!” Plenty of That Old Jazz! but actually turn the camera ci Dorothy Phillips winds up a cessful k’s engagement at Rex tonight in “Paid in Advance. story of the North, eee MISSION Bret Harte's famous “Outensts of | Poker Flat” has been picturized with Harry Carey, popular cowboy star, in the leading role | Carey plays “Square Shootir Lanyon, proprietor of a ga hall In an Arizona town, wh love with hix ward, Ruth W Gloria Hope, the petite who appeared here rece: Charles plays the role The popular college play, | Winning Str closes tonight. | eee | | Clara Horton, the youthful star of Rex Beach's big photoplay, “The Girl from Outside,” which opens at the Clemmer Saturday. Adapted from the novelist's widely read story, "The War Lady,” it is a drama of Alaska, yet it bears not the slightest resemblance either to “The Brand,” “The rs” or any other ORCHESTRA of the Rex Beach epics of the Yukon. ‘The production is under the Gold- Selections—"Oh, Boy!" wyn banner “Glowworm” ..... ....Lincke [ij] eras GUTERSON’S | Harry Carey is to picturize Peter |B. Kyne's story of “The Three God- fathers,” which formerly appeared in |the Saturday Evening Post. The glamour and romance sur he nomadic life of the Eng angular frame with the well round: |livh gypsies has been put on the orm which is usually accom | picture will be issued under the for wh “ps sous ot aaite ane screen by Maurie urneur in his t “The [ title, “The Gift of the Desert. production, “The Life Line,” opening ce fi Ppt ae are con: | at the Coliseum Saturday nandicap is evident |p from the continued appentanes in The theme of the melodrama cen newspapers and magazines of many ters around the attractive } ~¢ COMING in 8 DAYS The Motion Picture of Marvelous Charm Yons proposing various reme- the gypsy band, who is the real ‘ood or medicine or exercises, . Of a 2 dither ‘ot which: might or rignt owner of a fine English estate. His net be appropriate for a given fight for his inheritance to case. many exciting episodes, including a| Authorities, however, agree that as healthy nerve tinue is absolutely ‘rilling fire in a London theatre and a cue at sea by means of a essential to a strong, robust ae hm iy We breeches buoy of the heroine from a dicated by a tr symptoms, mc { sinking ship generally result in lack of energy,| The cast includes Jack Holt, Paul sleepl “8, irritability, deprea-|ine Stark, Seena Owe A sion, ete, which ve . ee na Owen and Tully ally consume t Marshall, Wallace Beery and Lewis | leaving ugly hol Cody. | bony neck and scrawny arms a Friday night brings to a close “The Our bodies need more phosphate | Market of Souls,” in which Dorothy | lesa, than most of them are able to ex- Dalton is starring. tract fron . In His Latest and Best— “THE the foods we eat now- ay | adays, an any opinions affirm | ¢ that there ia n may be | COLONIAL taken into the human system that} Sessue Hayakawa, the eminent ctively supplies this ote Meiency as phate k Japanese actor, plays the part of a Hindu in his most recent picture sold ' vd dr “The Man Beneath,” which opens at he essential phosphor ne Colonial Saturé ments in bitro-phosphate asaimilated |e Colonial Saturday by the nerve cella should soon pro-| ‘The story is of a high-caste Hindu : who, for the sake of the girl he loved, faced death and frustrated Shaneeh, slbeplocsnons, the spies of a black-hand society by | energy, ete, lifted, normal weight|a clever ruse and the use o' with” its attractive fullness and |Oriental ee mre ruddy glow of health replaces the |Orental power icture of skin and bones.| Monroe Saliebury closes a three! forme: Mins oreia Hamilton, who was|days' © Me 5 toie, | once thin and frail, reporting her |y ye tes in The Man in the Moon- own experience, writes: "Bitro-Phos- | !#ht" tonight phate has brought a magic trans-| tion w pounds» and well CAUTION — Altho — Bitro-Phos. |OM Which 1 phate is unexcelled for the relief of ing with Ann Little hervousness and attendant disorders, |ay costars. This is Joe owing to its tende Yo dworders as co-stars. This is Joe weight, one should ch the scales | Mal, the first undertaken by | pure organ MAN” The funniest matrimon- ial sweepstakes ever run anywhere! Service “* is WALLACE | LAST TIMES | n the Wurlitzer ; Playing his new song, MONROE : “Reaching ‘for the Moon” y is furnishing | nes of “Lightning Bry me. 1 gained 15 ur val sr before felt #o|for the while taking it, unl it is the de | since he severed his connection with sire to pul on flesh Universal,

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